He said that I have a loose enough grip (which is a plus in western pleasure horse back riding) on reality, that he just wouldn't do it if I could stay away from it. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
As a recovering meth addict with this Sunday marking my 10nth year anniversary of my first Full Day of an Opiate free life, I can only speak from my own withdrawal experiences, which proves there is always a down for every up. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
The first signs of life that my Dopamine receptors were needed to function again as they had been supplemented for 5 years was fucking amazing! I broke down crying knowing that I had walked through the worst of the storm and saw the tinyist light a bit further ahead and that kept me going. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
He openly said he didn't think my psyche would respoond if I were to.have another pregnancy. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
So, the process of taking drugs themselves has a attained or undergone ritualization, which is a sort of unrealistic idealization of their use? Hence, the false lure that they have attained? — Posty McPostface
Not, the same kind of morning ritual of making coffee, taking a shower, and pumping yourself up with positive feedback or thoughts?
Psilocybin is quite an interesting drug too due to its potential utility for treating depression, OCD, and phobias. — Posty McPostface
I don't think that psychedelics are seen as "cure or panacea" so much as, just in some special contexts, therapeutic aids. — Janus
Some people might fantasize about psychedelics, to be sure, but not that many i would say. — Janus
A lot of young meatheads fantasize about getting pissed and "cracking on" to "chicks", or getting the chicks pissed and rooting them,for example, but that is no reason to condemn alcohol tout court. — Janus
Right, but what do you mean by 'some special contexts'? I feel as though many people wonder about that too. — Posty McPostface
And maybe there is a third thing - social lubrication. People feel very self-conscious and distant from each other. Drugs are a way to blur those interpersonal boundaries. But isn't it better to address the causes of this more than the symptoms? What is it about society and other people - or your own habits - that could be changed to remove the same awkwardness that booze or weed allegedly removes? — apokrisis
And maybe there is a third thing - social lubrication. People feel very self-conscious and distant from each other. Drugs are a way to blur those interpersonal boundaries. But isn't it better to address the causes of this more than the symptoms? What is it about society and other people - or your own habits - that could be changed to remove the same awkwardness that booze or weed allegedly removes? — apokrisis
Well, yes, the aberration of reality or perversion of it though psychoactive drugs is not natural. — Posty McPostface
Is the prejudiced belief that people are hedonists or want to 'escape' from reality for a brief while, actually the case? — Posty McPostface
That assumes that the natural state, or rather the ordinary state that humans predominantly exemplify, is normal. — Wayfarer
Certainly, experiences with psychoactive agents can call that sense of normality into question. — Wayfarer
But then so too can some forms of asceticism or martial and spiritual disciplines - in fact, that is their aim. — Wayfarer
And that aim is predicated on the state that the 'consensus reality' that many live in, is itself an illusory or sub-optimal state, which becomes self-reinforcing. — Wayfarer
I would agree that nothing good can ever come from crystal meth or crack cocaine- from what I can ascertain, they have nothing to do with realising visionary states and their use is wholly and solely pernicious and destructive. But not all psychoactive agents are the same - the point of a 'heightened state of awareness' is the realisation that what you have hitherto taken to be real, may not be so concrete after all. — Wayfarer
That realisation, to me, was worth all the risk, and I think it has permanently, and positively, altered my view of life. — Wayfarer
in the positive, so I sense there's no use in further discussing it, and besides, I don't want to act as an advocate. — Wayfarer
Certainly, experiences with psychoactive agents can call that sense of normality into question. — Wayfarer
Which has been pontificated and idealized on as far as I'm aware. — Posty McPostface
Yes, but that doesn't entail the rejection of 'base undistoreted reality'. — Posty McPostface
I've resented the fact that the counter-culture movement was centered around individualism. Doesn't that detract from the message 'mind-altering-drugs' meant to portray? — Posty McPostface
None of what I say here should be taken as a recommendation for you or anyone else to try psychoactives. each individual has to decide for themselves whether such experiences are for them. That is what is meant by "individualism"; the free determination (as much as is possible, obviously) by the individual of their own experiences. — Janus
Isn't that the Post hoc ergo propter hoc fallacy in a nutshell? — Posty McPostface
Then they are poor medical professional, at that. That's why I always would ask for a second or third opinion. — Posty McPostface
Yeah, it's the placebo effect manifest in reality. Quite a phenomenon if you ask me. — Posty McPostface
Then, you open up the can of worms, that we are really weak if we need that crutch. I have always felt impotent whenever I have indulged in stimulants to treat my ADD. — Posty McPostface
I guess we can reduce the issue to a matter of taste. But, nobody gives you informed consent that what you may be doing is actually bad for your health or mental stability. It all smacks of some wishful thinking, and some such matters. — Posty McPostface
I wish I knew a Hippie that didn't have to indulge in drugs to propound such noble goals. Did they sabotage themselves/their message in some sense? — Posty McPostface
Not everyone, some yes. — Posty McPostface
Sleep is enough of a trip for me, every night. I heard DMT levels rise during REM sleep or something like that. — Posty McPostface
Depressing, really. — Posty McPostface
what's the lure of mind altering drugs to a person? — Posty McPostface
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